Altitude Sickness Risk Calculator
Assess your risk of altitude sickness based on elevation gain, ascent rate, acclimatization, and personal risk factors.
Altitude Sickness (Acute Mountain Sickness, or AMS) occurs when you ascend too quickly for your body to adjust to lower oxygen levels. It can happen to anyone regardless of fitness level.
How It Works: This calculator estimates risk based on four key factors:
- Target altitude — risk increases significantly above 8,000 ft (2,500 m)
- Ascent rate — how quickly you gain elevation
- Acclimatization — time spent at intermediate altitudes
- Personal history — previous altitude sickness increases future risk
Altitude Zones:
| Altitude | Zone | Oxygen (vs. sea level) | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–5,000 ft (0–1,500 m) | Low | 95–100% | Minimal |
| 5,000–8,000 ft (1,500–2,500 m) | Moderate | 85–95% | Low |
| 8,000–12,000 ft (2,500–3,600 m) | High | 75–85% | Moderate |
| 12,000–18,000 ft (3,600–5,500 m) | Very High | 60–75% | High |
| Above 18,000 ft (5,500 m) | Extreme | Below 60% | Very High |
The Golden Rules of Acclimatization:
- Above 10,000 ft (3,000 m), do not increase sleeping altitude by more than 1,000 ft (300 m) per day.
- For every 3,000 ft (1,000 m) gained, take a rest day (no altitude gain).
- “Climb high, sleep low” — daytime excursions to higher altitudes help acclimatization.
Symptoms of AMS:
- Headache (most common, present in 95% of cases)
- Nausea, loss of appetite
- Fatigue, weakness
- Dizziness
- Difficulty sleeping
Severe Forms:
- HACE (High Altitude Cerebral Edema): confusion, ataxia — life-threatening
- HAPE (High Altitude Pulmonary Edema): breathlessness, cough — life-threatening
Practical Example: A hiker ascending from 5,000 ft to 14,000 ft (1,500 m to 4,270 m) in 2 days: Elevation gain: 9,000 ft (2,740 m) in 2 days = 4,500 ft/day. This far exceeds the recommended 1,000 ft/day above 10,000 ft. Risk: High. Should plan at least 5–7 days with rest days.
Medication: Acetazolamide (Diamox) can help prevent AMS. Consult a doctor before travel.
Tips:
- Stay hydrated — dehydration worsens symptoms.
- Avoid alcohol for the first 48 hours at altitude.
- Fitness does NOT prevent altitude sickness. Slow ascent is the only reliable prevention.
- If symptoms worsen, descend immediately. Even 1,000 ft (300 m) can help significantly.
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